Sometimes I inherit books. I'm not sure where I got this one. Probably from my mom. It's a book of quotes. On the title page it says these are, "Thoughts collected from the essays and journals." It doesn't list an editor. There is no table of contents. The quotes are under several headings: "On Self-Reliance; Transcendentalism; There Is a thread...; Nature as Beauty; Love & Friendship; America & Politics; Sobering Realities; The Creative Act; Signs of Greatness; On R.W.E. Himself; and Religions & Sects." The title made me think I'd be reading an essay on Emerson's feelings about man and God. This is not an essay of that focus.
My first time reading through, no particular quote jumped out as deeply meaningful or significant to me. Even the illustrations are small versions of the cover, all green and black, just with different leaves almost resembling leaf rubbings. I think they're lithographs.
Maybe like all quote books, this is the kind of thing to open, read, and ponder at random, not to mostly read all at once during commercials of an exciting, long TV show like I did.
As I flip through it again and read here and there, I'm finding a few insightful quotes. I've read better, more well-organized quote books.